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The Life of Samuel Johnson, Vol. I

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(4,25 Sterne; 14 Bewertungen)

Boswell's Life of Samuel Johnson is widely considered to be the greatest English-language biography ever written. It was revolutionary in its efforts to represent Johnson as he was, celebrating his flaws as well as his genius, and in Boswell's decision to represent Johnson primarily by quoting his writings and relating personal anecdotes rather than relying on matters of public record. From the time of its publication till now, The Life of Johnson has been one of the most popular and influential books ever written. (Summary by Kirsten Ferreri.)

N.B. This recording does not include the Preface, Appendices and Footnotes. (14 hr 0 min)

Chapters

Part 1

25:22

Read by Denny Sayers (d. 2015)

Part 2

21:00

Read by Jim Mowatt

Part 3

48:58

Read by Andrew Coleman

Part 4

21:46

Read by Joshua B. Christensen

Part 5

17:53

Read by Gesine

Part 6

19:53

Read by Patti Brugman

Part 7

18:11

Read by Jason Isbell

Part 8

16:44

Read by Michael Yourshaw

Part 9

21:01

Read by Michael Yourshaw

Part 10

41:03

Read by Andrew Coleman

Part 11

23:48

Read by Andrew Coleman

Part 12

29:30

Read by Andrew Coleman

Part 13

20:47

Read by Cori Samuel

Part 14

16:07

Read by Janice

Part 15

33:29

Read by Brendan Hodge

Part 16

19:41

Read by Sibella Denton

Part 17

25:41

Read by Sibella Denton

Part 18

22:44

Read by Sibella Denton

Part 19

29:29

Read by Sibella Denton

Part 20

24:50

Read by Sibella Denton

Part 21

27:06

Read by Sibella Denton

Part 22

32:10

Read by Christian Pecaut

Part 23

26:34

Read by Michael Yourshaw

Part 24

25:17

Read by inkwelldragon

Part 25

34:16

Read by Janice

Part 26

33:44

Read by Michael Yourshaw

Part 27

28:01

Read by Sibella Denton

Part 28

28:04

Read by Justin Brett

Part 29

27:45

Read by Nick Marsh

Part 30

34:55

Read by Andrew Coleman

Part 31

21:39

Read by Philippa

Part 32

22:43

Read by Philippa

Bewertungen

Most of the readers did quite well, & Boswell is a fine writer.

(4 Sterne)

I'm pleasantly surprised at Boswell's talent as a writer and observer. But in this volume at least, he mostly quotes Johnson through various letters, essays, and conversations. Apparently, Boswell was some 20-30 years younger than Johnson and lived in Edinburgh while Johnson resided in London. Almost every year, Boswell spent 2 weeks in the summer with Johnson in London. Unfortunately, Johnson burned his diaries a few days before his death. This makes it difficult for Boswell to verify whether certain events or conversations attributed to Johnson actually occurred.